Electron Inertia and Magnetic Reconnection

Abstract

When electron inertia is the only non-ideal effect in the evolution of a magnetic field B, the field lines of B reconnect, but the lines of a related field B do not. B B + ∇× ( (c/ωpe)2μ0j ) with ωpe the plasma frequency and j the current density. Although a full four-dimensional relativistic calculation of B has been made, studies of B have been focused on systems that depend on only two spatial coordinates. Three results are given: (1) A relatively simple demonstration in three dimensional space that the lines of B do not reconnect when electron inertia is the only non-ideal effect. (2) The guiding center motion of charged particles is modified by a term that is proportional to (c/ωpe)2, which is smaller than the drifts proportional to the gyroradius unless the current density is extremely large. (3) In three dimensional space, the evolution velocity of B is characteristically chaotic, which means neighboring streamlines separate exponentially on a timescale τu. B undergoes large scale reconnection on a timescale that is only an order of magnitude or two longer than τu unless all diffusive non-ideal effects, such as resistivity, are absolutely zero.

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